FOOTBALL Two of a Kind I T'S remarkably easy to draw a parallel between the two games that end- ed the football sea- son in this corner of the country, and a parallel wIll now be drawn. Both were played in Philadelphia-the Penn-Cor- nell game on Thanksgiving Day and the Army-Navy game on Saturday. Both favorites-Penn and Army-won by a score of 21-0. Both underdogs were exceedingly troublesome during the first half of the game and then sub- sided in the face of clearly overwhelm- ing odds. In both games, too, what the linemen did was just as spectacular as the work of the ballcarriers, whom cus- tom requires to steal the show. Penn's defensive performance might almost be called the best of the season. It was apparent early in the game that the Cornell backs could not get through the middle of Penn's monumental line and could only occasionally turn its flanks, so Cornell, being blessed with a pair of ordinarily accomplished passers, relied heavily on them. Penn intercepted eight Cornell passes (the record shows only six, because two interceptions were nullified by penalties), knocked half a dozen others out of the hands of Cor- nell receivers, and half a dozen times brought down intending passers before they could get rid of the ball. At that, Cornell, a dogged group of young men, gained more yardage on passes than Penn, but two of Penn's passes were the direct cause of Penn touchdowns. For its part, the Cornell line, though scarcely as talented as Penn's, broke up some of Penn's brightest plays and set several bright runners on their ears when they least expected it. }\'ll sea- son, Cornell has suffered from an incurable case of fumbles, and last week many of its backs kept on mistak- ing the ball for a hot potato-a habit not tc) be recommended to teams that play Penn. A large part of this fall's truly im- pressive Penn team will graduate next June, and then Penn will be in the same spot Army was this year. This department will especially miss Tony Minisi, a youngster who did every- thing superlatively well. If, however, a w stubby, muscular Penn player named Dooney is around again next fall-and there seems every reason to expect that r he will be-he may make the less senti- : -J r " ... - 6 1 ' \ \ .,/ 1.1 ,':', ,'.:t.'-: \. ' /'), û , · 'I,':'-<i: " r"'" . It. ., 95 G t 4 / X' <->" ',' "..,' .." ',, :l, } , '..;.... Vi: ) ': 1 ;# ifë (.tiri .;. . tF : :( : , ;- '. : : ;'-1%:':'( p J :fJJ.ç' .$ %ê ' ,::: ' :::,, : " ::::: : :" ::, : ::,, ' : ' ::: ::::: ,* , , :: , ::, . , " ,:, : ' , >>- ,:, : , : : ' :,, : , ' :, : :,:: : :, : .:::, : :, : :::, ' , . :::, : : ' ,, ' ,, : ,, ' :,, : :::,, ' ,:::, ' :::, ' :, . :".: . ,::, ' ., ; :,: : :: :" .. , , . ::, ': ":, , , ' : , , ' , ': : , , . : . , . . ' , , r M :r!J '\ . ,! :; ,.L , ;' i Wi : l ' Wffi :.\." ' The travel-wise ;:::::.' o ir:", :::< ' "w, "'''''':':''' Ãf ''''':::'' .". .-.;',:', ,.;.., 'j.:.:.;..'.',' ':. :::: {::":A-l "ft.:. ,:..:;::./ ,::> :: ';':-' ,', :::::' TOUROBE borrows wardrobe trunk tactics to keep your clothes handsomely in hand -; <the dI <J shown here is in the new Skymate constructron, tested and approtJed by T W A for air travel. . . sturdily built for your clothes' protection, kept light for your cont'enience. ::J , ! H ART M A H H COM P A H Y · RAe, NEW I S CON. SIN